The Athletic’s 2026 NHL goalie prospect rankings put newly acquired Edmonton Oilers goaltender Devon Levi at No. 11, a spot that keeps him in the conversation even as questions linger about whether his game will translate fully at the NHL level.
Scott Wheeler’s annual list, released Wednesday, featured Levi among the top 20, with the Canadian netminder landing just outside the top 10. Wheeler pointed to Levi’s AHL track record, his still-young age by goalie standards, and a skill set that continues to give him believers.
“Levi’s pro career hasn’t lived up to the pedigree he built in his college years, but his career AHL save percentage is still .914. And while I’ve been in the minority in continuing to believe that he’s more than just a No.
3, I’m prepared to bet that he’ll finally take that next step with the Oilers. He’s still young by goalie standards, even if it feels like he has been around forever and hasn’t broken through at the NHL level.”
Wheeler also laid out why Levi still has a case in today’s league, especially for a goalie his size.
“He still has pretty much exactly the skills smaller goalies need to be successful. Impressive control on his inside and outside edges, and the patience to hold them.
Quick feet on his shuffles so that he can stick with dekes and go post-to-post or low-to-high to get to tough pucks. Good hands.
Excellent reads on shooters. Excellent tracking through and under traffic.
And a battler’s mentality in the net, which keeps him in plays even when he looks like he’s down and out. There aren’t a ton of goalies his height in today’s NHL, at least not starting ones, but guys like Jet Greaves and Dustin Wolf have broken through, and I’m still not ready to count Levi out.
The clock is now ticking after the trade, though.”
Edmonton landed Levi from the Buffalo Sabres on July 1, getting him and a 2028 seventh-round pick in exchange for Edmonton’s 2028 third-round pick. The 24-year-old has appeared in 39 NHL games over the past three seasons, including nine last season, when he posted an .872 save percentage with Buffalo.
Levi now enters a crowded fight for minutes in Edmonton, where he’ll be competing with Tristan Jarry and Frederik Andersen. Andersen, of course, comes in with the strongest recent résumé of the group after leading the Carolina Hurricanes to a Stanley Cup last season.
At the top of Wheeler’s rankings is Montreal Canadiens goalie Jacob Fowler, who sits in Tier 1. The rest of the top five is made up of Joshua Ravensbergen of the San Jose Sharks, Trey Augustine of the Detroit Red Wings, Sebastian Cossa of the Utah Mammoth, and Pyotr Andreyanov of the Columbus Blue Jackets, all in Tier 2.
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